HRM, Olori Aderonke Ademiluyi-Ogunwusi, the CEO of Adire Oodua Textile Training Hub, takes us through the step-by-step process of making Adire Alabela popularly known as Adire Batik.
Assalamu Alaikum. Greetings from Sri Lanka 🇱🇰 ❤️. I am watching the video now 😀. Grate job. I love to do a tryout. Fantastic. Thank you for sharing. Hope to see more soon. Inshallah.
This video is so enlightening and the fabric turned out so beautiful. Please where can I find more information about the training such as duration etc?
Salam, I am from Pakistan and I want to learn all the beautiful unique techniques you teach in batik making please. Could you pls tell me how I can learn online ?
Just watching the video, is a job well done but ma you don't tell us how many spoons of sulphate and that of dye and how many yards of fabric then the kind of water use for dyeing the fabric. Thanks
melt regular candle sticks in a pot. You can melt several pieces. Now the drawing material that is dipped into the wax for drawing is made from a piece of foam. You have to cut and trim a piece of foam into a pencil-like shape, but much bigger than pencil so that you can conveniently hold it.
I tried dis process my candle wax just sticked on my wooden table I had to pull my fabric off d table leaving d stamped wax on d table I followed dis process all through n realized my batik didn’t even show Kindly help ma
Now the Chinese are making Adire, very soon they will be making Aso Oke. We need to support n protect our African local product. No imported Adire n Asooke most be allow in Nigeria. This is one of the reasons the Chinese were coming to Nigeria to learn our language and culture. Some of them are in Ife and Ibadan universities and I hope our government will be wise to applie same method and send some students to China, Japan and India to learn their language n culture.